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Snapdeal co-founder and CEO, Kunal Bahl.
According to a report by the Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India along with PricewaterhouseCoopers, India's e-commerce sector is expected to log a compound annual growth rate of 35 percent and cross the $100 billion mark in value by 2019. The study, released in December 2014, put the industry at a current value of $17 billion.
Meanwhile, Nomura estimates the burgeoning industry to quadruple to $43 billion over the next five years from $10 billion in 2013, a report released in August 2014 said.
While the exact forecasts vary, they highlight what analysts see as the enormous potential of India's online retail market, catapulted by the country's rising disposable incomes and greater internet penetration. In recent years, Indian consumers have grown increasingly comfortable with shopping online, snapping up books and electronics from the nation's three large online marketplaces: Flipkart, Snapdeal and Amazon.
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Founded in 2010, Snapdeal is now India's fourth most valuable startup, with gross value of the goods sold on company's online marketplace hitting $3 billion, according to data compiled by Wall Street Journal. The website has 25 million subscribers and over 150,000 businesses selling on its platform.
"It took us three years to get the first 100,000 sellers, [but] the next 100,000 will come in in just six months. That's how exponential India's growth [is]. We just launched a mobile platform called Shopo and in 10 days, we've had 10,000 sellers set up shops without any marketing or promotion," Bahl told CNBC.
"That's why I think India is taking to online buying and selling at a pace that even China did not see," he said.